Chaos in Print: The Further Adventures of the Scarecrow
Lifeless Edition
Greetings, y'all! 'Tis I, the Scarecrow, here once again. Before we
get to my column, there is just one thing I want to say. Thee are two rooms
on campus that I have to say are my genuine favorites. The first one would
be the station, and the second would be the Dag office. It's just a difficult
feeling to describe. When you walk into these places, you just look at
the decor, smell the air, and you instantly think "Here thar be students."
They are the two places where the student is the complete boss. The cafeteria
is close, but the mouth-watering aroma of grey stuff on a shingle kind
of overpowers the sensation. The coffee house is OK, but it's too social.
No, the best places on campus are the station and the paper, because there
every student feels that sense of belonging.
It is of that sense that I speak to you tonight. Just the other night,
I was harassing our esteemed editor as he was helping wire the upper floor
of Faith and Life for the school's computer network. Up there in the
Dag's offices were the editors of the Bug. (For those of you
who don't care, the Bug is the high school paper for Camrose School
Division.) One of those editors is a huge fan of Sailor Moon, and
was able to lecture me on the differences between the original Japanese
comic, the original Japanese cartoon, and the watered-down series that
we Canucks get. She then filled me in on plot lines that we will probably
never see over here. After this, our editor and the Bug's editor
had a lengthy discussion on previous X-Men storylines, and drew
comparisons to Star Trek episodes. This got me to thinking "What
does it mean to have no life?"
Don't get me wrong. I am just as bad as those two. I can drone on about
what magical items from Gargoyles are required to make you the most
powerful sorcerer/sorceress. I can quote Batman villain origins
backwards and forwards. And, most important of all, I can tell you the
merits and weaknesses of every one of the Power Ranger's Zords. So, for
me to condemn these people would be too hypocritical. I am one of them.
So, this "no life" concept has me bugged. Can I know what it
is to have no life if I don't have one, either?
I mean, face it. Usually the people who loudly proclaim that we don't
have a life are the ones who claim to have one. They have even come up
with a wide variety of words to describe the ones without a life: trekkies,
fan boys, geeks, nerds, the list continues. Now, the people that I went
to high school with would tell you that having a life would mean screwing
your studies, seeing how many beers you could drink before class, and how
many "dates" you could have on the weekend. Here at college,
those with lives are pretty much the same, only they don't screw the studies
as badly, and they save the drinking for Thursday nights. So, if I understand
this correctly, to have a life, you must be a beer-guzzling nitwit with
a severe lack of priorities. And to have no life, you must be knowledgeable
in realms of fantasy, leading to a minimal grasp on the real world.
Minimal grasp on the real world! They say that those with no lives are
those glued to a screen in the computer lab playing hours and hours of
Void. That, or they are stuck in a floor lounge watching Star Trek. But,
in each case, they are in a lab, or in a lounge. They are out there, interacting
with people who have no life. And where are those with lives? In a bar,
drinking and partying.
So, we have established that those with no lives do get out, they just
do other things besides waste their money on booze. They waste their money
on comic books, Magic cards, and videos of cartoons from the eighties.
These are the staples of having no life. You must spend several hundred
dollars a month on Spawn, X-Men, and many other smaller,
lesser known titles that I can't go into here. You must constantly be buying
new packs of Magic cards to keep your Mana up and crush the opponent. And,
you must obsessively tape every episode of Batman: TAS, Gargoyles, and
The Weird Al Show. These are the requisites of no life. Now, let's
compare this to those with lives. Those with lives waste their money on
booze, issues of The Hockey News, and videos of sports bloopers.
i.e., You must spend several hundred dollars a month on Molson, Pilsner,
and many other smaller, lesser known brands that I can't get into here.
You must constantly be buying The Hockey News so you know how your
team will crush its opponents. And, you must obsessively own every copy
of Don Cherry's Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Hockey. Am I drawing a comparison,
here? You betcha.
Now, let me flip-flop here. Not all people with lives are involved with
hockey. I say this because I know many people whose lives revolve around
baseball, politics, movies, and membership in many committees. Plus, there
are a lot of big, mean hockey players who live in my dorm who would beat
the living tar out of me if I insinuated what I'm insinuating. But my point,
and I do have one, is that those with no lives do in fact have lives. They
just have no interest in the lives of people who claim to have lives. They
have found the groups who share their passions, and not something as violent
and loathsome as hockey.
It is that constant looking for a group to belong to that pushes us
forward. Some find it on a hockey team, some find it in the backroom of
a comic book store. True, some lives just appear to be more productive
than others. For example, hockey players could potentially go on to make
millions in their sport. Those who frequent bars could pick-up a great
knowledge of how to mix drinks and dance steps, making him/her the swingin'est
bartender around. And those of us with no lives? Well, look at it this
way. The editor of the Dag reads comic books. The station manager
for CLCR plays Magic: The Gathering. I am up at eight on Saturday
mornings to watch cartoons. So, while those with lives are content to be
part of the world, those of us without lives are striving to change it.
So, go ahead, play your hockey, got to your bars, and continue calling
those of us who have no lives trekkies, fan boys, geeks, and nerds. But,
remember this. Next time you are about to call someone a nerd, recall this
quote from the cartoon Freakazoid!: "Who writes all the best
selling novels? Nerds do! Who directs all the blockbuster movies? Nerds
do! Who writes computer programs so incredibly complex that only they know
how to run them? Nerds do! Who runs the world? Nerds do!" Goodnight,
everybody!
Don't forget, if you didn't like this article, then you'll probably hate my show, Chaos in a Box with the Scarecrow, Wednesdays at 9 on CLCR.